News
Feb 18, 2019 | In the Media, News
Publiée dans le revue «Plos One», une nouvelle étude examine les conséquences du changement climatique sur l’épidémie du VIH, en particulier en Afrique australe. Son auteure, l’épidémiologiste américaine Andrea Low, a répondu aux questions de «Libération»....
Feb 15, 2019 | In the Media, News
ICAP at Columbia Mailman School of Public Health has been awarded a grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to conduct an extensive population survey effort in an array of countries and communities hardest hit by the global HIV epidemic. The...
Feb 15, 2019 | In the Media, News
Drought and resulting issues around food security were also shown in a recent study to affect rates of new HIV infections. The research by Columbia University, the Lesotho Ministry of Health and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that adolescent...
Feb 14, 2019 | News
ICAP at Columbia University, in partnership with the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), through the USAID-funded OPTIMIZE Project, has developed a health care worker training package for countries transitioning to dolutegravir (DTG)-based regimens...
Feb 7, 2019 | In the Media, News
Adolescent girls exposed to severe drought conditions in rural Lesotho had higher rates of HIV, according to a new study led by researchers at ICAP at Columbia University, a global health organization based at the Columbia Mailman School of Public Health, and from the...
Feb 7, 2019 | In the Media, News
The UN strategy is a global one that aims to have most people living with HIV diagnosed and on antiretroviral treatment by 2020, and to maintain suppression of the virus until 2030. If that happens, the number of new infections and transmissions globally would be so...